Either of the following:
-> Vim + Eclim + Rope + pylint + PyDev + Eclipse + cygwin + WindowsXP
-> Vim + Linux
Mick.
WingIDE has excellent Python support (it's a Python IDE, after all), and the
latest version has full support for git.
j
quick and dirty test script: ipython
a larger problem with code I am likely to use later: spyder
a multi-module large project (like wrapping opencv): Wing
Chris
I use a mixture of FreeBSD, rxvt-unicode, GNU screen, zsh, vim, git,
Python, and Exuberant Ctags.
A word of praise/warning about Eclipse: The Python integration is
pretty good--I especially like the debugger. But the git support is
lacking--it's nowhere near the level of SVN or CVS integration, though
it is basically usable.
I'm using Egit 0.5.0 on F11, with Eclipse 3.5.
-Ryan
On console only: vim + screen
On X: (vim or gedit) + terminator
Geremy Condra
I use IDLE for python and Bash for GIT.
Regards,
~Simon
ActiveState's Komodo IDE.
bash + emacs
> Aweks a écrit :
> > what do you use?
>
> bash + emacs
Yes, Bash and the toolkit provided by the GNU operating system are an
excellent integrated development environment (IDE).
Emacs has a ‘vc’ mode, and Git provides an Emacs module to support Git
in ‘vc’. It will then work the same as any other VCS supported by Emacs.
Learn to use the GNU operating system, and a powerful free-software
mature programmable text editor (Emacs or Vim), and you have an IDE that
works for any popular programming language.
--
\ “Oh, I realize it's a penny here and a penny there, but look at |
`\ me: I've worked myself up from nothing to a state of extreme |
_o__) poverty.” —Groucho Marx |
Ben Finney